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Where There is No Government
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Where There is No Government : Enforcing Property Rights in Common Law Africa

Book Details

Format Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10 0199782482
ISBN-13 9780199782482
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Country of Manufacture GB
Country of Publication GB
Publication Date Aug 11th, 2011
Print length 224 Pages
Weight 476 grams
Dimensions 16.60 x 24.30 x 2.30 cms
Ksh 17,050.00
Manufactured on Demand 0 in stock

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Where There is No Government is at once an authoritative and powerful account of this central dilemma in Africa, and a prescription for addressing it.
In Sub-Saharan Africa, property rights law is an especially potent source of instability. As the worldwide post-Cold War era trend toward state-run property rights expansion clashes with longstanding customs and what many would consider bureaucratic incapacity, conflicts are inevitable. Many advocates from NGOs have argued that the region''s manifold governance problems stem at least in part from the state''s inability to enforce property rights. Instead, ''private'' property rights regimes, largely independent of the state, have flourished. In recent years, there has, in fact, been a concerted effort to create stronger property rights laws, and in Where There is No Government, Sandra Joireman traces how this has played out in Ghana, Uganda, and Kenya. The problem is that while new, better laws might now be on the books, they effectively do not exist if they are not enforced--a fact that causes major problems for development. Those who possess land cannot legally prove it''s theirs, and those who are often culturally prohibited from owning property, like women and migrants, have trouble exercising their legal rights to property.While there are those who may argue that African understandings of property law are relatively efficient and adaptable because they have evolved organically, Joireman contends that this view discounts one very likely possibility--that such systems are in fact predatory and favor elites. Operating from this assumption, she employs a series of novel measures to determine which types of property regimes promote social welfare and which hinder it. She concludes that while the sub-Saharan states usually have a monopoly over the use of force, they typically do not have control over property law. Bowing to customary understandings of property, they have largely ceded it to private actors (many of whom are criminal). If Africa is to develop in a manner that promotes broad social well being, a legalistic approach is inadequate--changes in statutes and laws are not enough. State institutions must be able and willing to enforce property rights if development is to occur. Where There is No Government is at once an authoritative and powerful account of this central dilemma in Africa, and a prescription for addressing it.

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